3 Answers
3

As long as one of the "viable exits" meets the standards for an emergency escape and rescue opening, then you should be all set.

International Residential Code 2012

Chapter 3 - Building Planning

Section R310 - Emergency Escape and Rescue Openings

R310.1 Emergency escape and rescue required.
Basements, habitable attics and every sleeping room shall have at least one operable emergency escape and rescue opening. Where basements contain one or more sleeping rooms, emergency egress and rescue openings shall be required in each sleeping room. Where emergency escape and rescue openings are provided they shall have a sill height of not more than 44 inches (1118 mm) measured from the finished floor to the bottom of the clear opening. Where a door opening having a threshold below the adjacent ground elevation serves as an emergency escape and rescue opening and is provided with a bulkhead enclosure, the bulkhead enclosure shall comply with Section R310.3. The net clear opening dimensions required by this section shall be obtained by the normal operation of the emergency escape and rescue opening from the inside. Emergency escape and rescue openings with a finished sill height below the adjacent ground elevation shall be provided with a window well in accordance with Section R310.2. Emergency escape and rescue openings shall open directly into a public way, or to a yard or court that opens to a public way.

Since you have 2 walkable paths, you are covered. Egress windows are needed as an alternative in case fire is blocking the path that the bedroom door would allow. This is only required of bedrooms in basements. I have a copy of the ICC 2012 residential building code in Adobe PDF, I cant get the section of the page up since it is PDF, I can get it as an .XPS, that doesn't help either. It does refer to doors being accepted as a rescue opening as long as it goes to a yard or public space.